G. A. LENNON

Geri Lennon writes as G. A. Lennon. She is an historic writer and journalist, writing multiple pieces on human rights and other important international issues. She has been published in magazines and newspapers as well as in online international projects. Named among the Top 100 multi-media producers, her video productions and script writing on behalf of several world health organizations brought awards to them all. She is currently co-authoring a non-fiction biography on pandemics.

Geri graduated from the University of Southern California with a Bachelor of Science in Clinical Sciences/Microbiology, and later received her Master of Science degree. A medical writer who has worked in the field of public health as well as tropical and infectious disease, Lennon served on Project Hope in Nicaragua, where she helped establish labs, taught local students, and served as a team vaccinator. Lennon also served as head of a microbiology lab in a large U.S. teaching hospital at the dawn of the AIDS crisis.

As a writer, editor and multimedia specialist, Lennon has consulted in the U.S. and several developing countries. She was recognized as one of the Top 100 Multi-Media Producers for her work on multi-lingual training projects for the Centers for Disease Control and the World Health Organization. Lennon has served as a volunteer to the archival department at the United Nations International War Crimes Tribunal for Rwanda in Arusha, Tanzania. She also produced a documentary film focusing on three tribal women afflicted with AIDS in Kenya entitled: Can You Hear Me, I'm Dying. Lennon has written two historical novels and writes regularly on current affairs.